Introduction
At some point cell phone designers will stop screwing around with the keypad layout. To help differentiate its otherwise slammin' Blackjack (aka SGH-1607), available from Cingular for $499.99 (or $199.99 with the usual contract commitment stipulations), Samsung's industrial designers could not resist screwing with the numeric keypad. Instead of integrating the standard three-by-three plus 0 arrangement into the QWERTY layout like every other Smartphone extant, they've instead bizarrely alternated the grey number keys with black alpha keys. In other words, the 1/E key is next to the @/R button instead of the 2. What in the Sam Hill were they thinking? Different sure, but Samsung also has vastly increased the level of difficulty for this device's primary function -- making a phone call. Talk about your fatal flaws.
If you can somehow look beyond this inexplicable hiccup, you'll be rewarded with an otherwise wonderfully sleek and slim Windows Mobile 5 Smartphone that exceeds normal cell speed limits on Cingular's new 3G HSDPA/UMTS network with access to the carrier's vast array of streaming video and music services.

Different, sure, but Samsung also has vastly increased the level of difficulty for this device's primary function, making a call.

by mikes on November 8, 2009:
“This phone battery is really weak and it drops calls daily. The screen is dull and the phone is awful. It only looks really good.” More...